The length of Sprint has been a subject of much debate in the agile community since Scrum introduced the original length of 4 weeks. But what is the right length for the Sprint? Jonas shares with us a cautionary tale on how longer sprints can lead to large problems. He also shares his views and experience on how to go from longer to shorter sprints. All the way to 1 week sprints.
About Jonas Allared
Jonas is an experienced Scrum Master and Agile Coach and he is especially passionate about creating effective teams and healthy organizations. With focus on the human side he enjoys raising both the well-being and productivity of those he works with.
You can link with Jonas Allared on LinkedIn and connect with Jonas Allared on Twitter.
Scrum made it clear from the start that Scrum Master and Product Owner roles are different and require different mind-sent and therefore also different people. But still many companies want to push for having only one person in both roles. Does that work? Maybe it can work, but in this episode we listen to a story where that did not work and what are the signs to look for if are ever in that position.
About Jonas Allared
Jonas is an experienced Scrum Master and Agile Coach and he is especially passionate about creating effective teams and healthy organizations. With focus on the human side he enjoys raising both the well-being and productivity of those he works with.
You can link with Jonas Allared on LinkedIn and connect with Jonas Allared on Twitter.
The #NoEstimates hashtag has been very active on twitter, and many people in the Agile community are pitching in with their thoughts. But what is #NoEstimates about for the author of the first #NoEstimates book? What can we learn from Vasco’s journey that led him to find #NoEstimates? Join us for this active and passionate conversation between Gunther and Vasco.
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe
Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
Gunther believes that Scrum - the most applied software development framework - will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people.
Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
About Vasco Duarte
The regular host of the Scrum Master Toolbox podcast Vasco Duarte joins Gunther for a reverse interview this week.
Vasco is on a journey to transform product development organizations into product business organizations. He does that by focusing the work of the product development teams on the end-to-end life-cycle of their products. From Concept to Cash and Back!
He is currently a Managing Partner at Oikosofy.
Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Director, Agile Coach are only some of the roles that Vasco has taken in software development organizations. Having worked in the software industry since 1997, and Agile practitioner since 2004.
You can read more from Vasco at his blog: http://SoftwareDevelopmentToday.com
You can link with Vasco Duarte on LinkedIn and connect with Vasco Duarte on Twitter.
What does it mean to be a successful Scrum Master? That’s a question we ask every week on the podcast. But how about asking: what does it mean to have a successful Scrum adoption? Vasco and Gunther discuss the value of Scrum for organizations and what we need to reach successful Scrum in any organization.
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe
Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
Gunther believes that Scrum - the most applied software development framework - will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people.
Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
About Vasco Duarte
The regular host of the Scrum Master Toolbox podcast Vasco Duarte joins Gunther for a reverse interview this week.
Vasco is on a journey to transform product development organizations into product business organizations. He does that by focusing the work of the product development teams on the end-to-end life-cycle of their products. From Concept to Cash and Back!
He is currently a Managing Partner at Oikosofy.
Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Director, Agile Coach are only some of the roles that Vasco has taken in software development organizations. Having worked in the software industry since 1997, and Agile practitioner since 2004.
You can read more from Vasco at his blog: http://SoftwareDevelopmentToday.com
You can link with Vasco Duarte on LinkedIn and connect with Vasco Duarte on Twitter.
Adopting Agile and Scrum specifically is no easy feat. In fact there’s a lot of failed Scrum adoptions out there. What are those problems that prevent our Scrum adoption from succeeding? And most importantly, where should we start when working with a new team or organization? In this episode we discuss the best way to get started with Scrum. Vasco shares with us the 2 steps that every Scrum Master should start with in a new team or organization.
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe
Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
Gunther believes that Scrum - the most applied software development framework - will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people.
Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
About Vasco Duarte
The regular host of the Scrum Master Toolbox podcast Vasco Duarte joins Gunther for a reverse interview this week.
Vasco is on a journey to transform product development organizations into product business organizations. He does that by focusing the work of the product development teams on the end-to-end life-cycle of their products. From Concept to Cash and Back!
He is currently a Managing Partner at Oikosofy.
Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Director, Agile Coach are only some of the roles that Vasco has taken in software development organizations. Having worked in the software industry since 1997, and Agile practitioner since 2004.
You can read more from Vasco at his blog: http://SoftwareDevelopmentToday.com
You can link with Vasco Duarte on LinkedIn and connect with Vasco Duarte on Twitter.
In this episode we review the first 2 waves of Scrum. What they were, and what they meant for the Agile adoption and community. Next we do a bit of future prediction and look at what is the next wave of Agile and Scrum. Where is Scrum going? How can a Scrum Master get ready for that? Check out this Episode to learn what’s next for Scrum.
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe
Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
Gunther believes that Scrum - the most applied software development framework - will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people.
Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
About Vasco Duarte
The regular host of the Scrum Master Toolbox podcast Vasco Duarte joins Gunther for a reverse interview this week.
Vasco is on a journey to transform product development organizations into product business organizations. He does that by focusing the work of the product development teams on the end-to-end life-cycle of their products. From Concept to Cash and Back!
He is currently a Managing Partner at Oikosofy.
Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Director, Agile Coach are only some of the roles that Vasco has taken in software development organizations. Having worked in the software industry since 1997, and Agile practitioner since 2004.
You can read more from Vasco at his blog: http://SoftwareDevelopmentToday.com
You can link with Vasco Duarte on LinkedIn and connect with Vasco Duarte on Twitter.
We’ve all gone through a twisting and turning Agile journey. When you are a pioneer in Agile adoption like Vasco is, it is impossible not have gone through some very interesting, and twisted steps in that journey. In this episode Vasco shares a secret about his own Agile journey and that that has completely shaped his view of Agile in software development in particular, but also in the overall business landscape.
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe
Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
Gunther believes that Scrum - the most applied software development framework - will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people.
Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
About Vasco Duarte
The regular host of the Scrum Master Toolbox podcast Vasco Duarte joins Gunther for a reverse interview this week.
Vasco is on a journey to transform product development organizations into product business organizations. He does that by focusing the work of the product development teams on the end-to-end life-cycle of their products. From Concept to Cash and Back!
He is currently a Managing Partner at Oikosofy.
Product Manager, Scrum Master, Project Manager, Director, Agile Coach are only some of the roles that Vasco has taken in software development organizations. Having worked in the software industry since 1997, and Agile practitioner since 2004.
You can read more from Vasco at his blog: http://SoftwareDevelopmentToday.com
You can link with Vasco Duarte on LinkedIn and connect with Vasco Duarte on Twitter.
There’s some serious gaps in the current Agile scaling frameworks. We know that because we are the start of the scaling journey. But what are the scaling frameworks missing today that we should be looking out for? Steve shares his views on what is missing and how looking at the system performance can help us find the gap, as well as what solutions are already out there to help us close the gap. In this episode we discuss the TameFlow community as well as the concept of Throughput Accounting, from the Theory of Constraints.
About Steve Tendon
Steve Tendon popularised the Theory of constraints in some of the agile community and he is also the Creator of the TameFlow systems thinking approach which nurtures breakthrough performance innovation.
This system is described in the book with the same name: Tame the Flow.
You can link with Steve Tendon on LinkedIn and connect with Steve Tendon on Twitter.
What is success for us in our roles is a question that we constantly ask here on the podcast and we get many different answers. This week we have Steve Tendon with us that shares with psychological flow, a state of FLOW is when we reach optimum performance. Success is then helping our teams reach a state of FLOW. Listen to the episode to hear Steve’s definition of flow as well as his tips on how to help teams reach that state of flow.
About Steve Tendon
Steve Tendon popularised the Theory of constraints in some of the agile community and he is also the Creator of the TameFlow systems thinking approach which nurtures breakthrough performance innovation.
This system is described in the book with the same name: Tame the Flow.
You can link with Steve Tendon on LinkedIn and connect with Steve Tendon on Twitter.
Change is a process. We’ve heard that over and over. But what does that mean in practice? Steve shares with us some lessons and some patterns that help change grow. Listen in to learn about the Unity of Purpose pattern and the tools Steve uses to enable and catalyse that pattern-
About Steve Tendon
Steve Tendon popularised the Theory of constraints in some of the agile community and he is also the Creator of the TameFlow systems thinking approach which nurtures breakthrough performance innovation.
This system is described in the book with the same name: Tame the Flow.
You can link with Steve Tendon on LinkedIn and connect with Steve Tendon on Twitter.
There are many aspects we need to take into account when we help a team form and reach their potential. In this episode we share many tools and links that can help you create the team’s roadmap to high performance. We discuss the Core Protocols; some tools from Theory of Constraints like the Evaporating cloud - a conflict resolution tool; and POPCORN FLOW, a tool that helps team learn quickly.
About Steve Tendon
Steve Tendon popularised the Theory of constraints in some of the agile community and he is also the Creator of the TameFlow systems thinking approach which nurtures breakthrough performance innovation.
This system is described in the book with the same name: Tame the Flow.
You can link with Steve Tendon on LinkedIn and connect with Steve Tendon on Twitter.
Steve has studied highly productive teams, and he shares with us some stories as well as what is necessary after Scrum is there. He also shares a tool that may be critical in our work as Scrum Masters.
In this episode we refer to the TameFlow community where he shares his ideas about high performing teams.
About Steve Tendon
Steve Tendon popularised the Theory of constraints in some of the agile community and he is also the Creator of the TameFlow systems thinking approach which nurtures breakthrough performance innovation.
This system is described in the book with the same name: Tame the Flow.
You can link with Steve Tendon on LinkedIn and connect with Steve Tendon on Twitter.
Start with the team! Paru asks us to consider the team when looking at the overall system. We can use the Squad Health Check (also the Atlassian version) survey or some other similar tool to understand how the system is influencing the performance of the team. As we go through the questions, then consider how the external (to the team) factors may be influencing the team. Listen in to learn how Paru uses these tools and other tools to help understand the system around the team.
About Paru Madhavan
Paru works as Scrum Master across two squads at OFX. She's worked in Agile teams and in various roles such as Business Analyst, Product Owner and Scrum Master since 2011. To her, Agile and software development just go hand in hand!
You can link with Paru Madhavan on LinkedIn and connect with Paru Madhavan on Twitter.
When we start our journey as Scrum Masters, many of us start from the perspective that the team is the focus of our work, and the product is the outcome a job well done. However, we also need to consider our own development as people and Scrum Masters. Paru shares her thoughts on both the team and the personal aspects of our successful journey as Scrum Masters.
About Paru Madhavan
Paru works as Scrum Master across two squads at OFX. She's worked in Agile teams and in various roles such as Business Analyst, Product Owner and Scrum Master since 2011. To her, Agile and software development just go hand in hand!
You can link with Paru Madhavan on LinkedIn and connect with Paru Madhavan on Twitter.
Many teams go through a crisis in their Scrum adoption. They don’t feel good about the ceremonies, it’s hard to keep the discipline of regular meetings to review the backlog, keeping the stories small enough to deliver value in a sprint, schedule meetings that fit the stakeholders, etc. Scrum is full of disciplined approaches to specific knowledge work problems. So this team decided to go to Kanban. Listen in to learn what happened to the team, and how Paru helped the team find its way again.
About Paru Madhavan
Paru works as Scrum Master across two squads at OFX. She's worked in Agile teams and in various roles such as Business Analyst, Product Owner and Scrum Master since 2011. To her, Agile and software development just go hand in hand!
You can link with Paru Madhavan on LinkedIn and connect with Paru Madhavan on Twitter.
It’s hard enough to deliver on time when the backlog is fairly static, but what happens when the backlog is ever changing. The CTO drops-in every other day to change the priorities, all decisions are made on a spur of the moment, the team does not have all the necessary skills to deliver (i.e. not cross-functional)? Listen in as Paru explains how she lived through such a situation.
About Paru Madhavan
Paru works as Scrum Master across two squads at OFX. She's worked in Agile teams and in various roles such as Business Analyst, Product Owner and Scrum Master since 2011. To her, Agile and software development just go hand in hand!
You can link with Paru Madhavan on LinkedIn and connect with Paru Madhavan on Twitter.
Paru shares with us a story that illustrates one of the biggest risks with spikes: the confidence that we know how to develop something. How can we then help a team that believes they found “the solution” to take advantage and learn from spikes without getting hung up on a particular solution?
About Paru Madhavan
Paru works as Scrum Master across two squads at OFX. She's worked in Agile teams and in various roles such as Business Analyst, Product Owner and Scrum Master since 2011. To her, Agile and software development just go hand in hand!
You can link with Paru Madhavan on LinkedIn and connect with Paru Madhavan on Twitter.
Gunther will introduce, in this bonus episode, an approach that he has developed over the years, to help companies that are struggling with Scrum in particular or Agile in general. But before that, we have a very interactive conversation about some key questions for Scrum Masters and Agile Coaches.
The biggest obstacles to successful Scrum Adoption
About Gunther Verheyen
Gunther left consulting in 2013 to partner with Ken Schwaber, Scrum co-creator, at Scrum.org. He represented Ken and Scrum.org in Europe. Gunther left Scrum.org in 2016 to continue his journey of Scrum as an independent Scrum Caretaker.
He calls himself a connector, writer, speaker, humaniser. Gunther assists, serves, advices teams, individuals and executives.
Gunther believes that Scrum – the most applied software development framework – will not only increase the value that software delivers to organizations but is also a way to re-humanise the workplace for people. Gunther likes to inspire individuals, teams, departments, and organizations to realize their potential.
Beyond Scrum, Gunther is all about his family, life, books, and music. He communicates in Dutch and in English. Gunther is co-creator to Agility Path and the Nexus framework for Scaled Professional Scrum.
You can link with Gunther Verheyen on LinkedIn and connect with Gunther Verheyen on Twitter.
The purpose of the organization is a big influencer on the team’s performance. But once that obstacle is surpassed we need to help the team take ownership of their own development, and Khaja shares a technique that can help the team find it’s place and flow within the organization.
About Khaja Mohiuddin
An accomplished and fluent communicator with strong investigation, problem-solving and decision-making skills. Managing the work from initial request through estimation, approval, requirements, build and implementation.
You can link with Khaja Mohiuddin on LinkedIn.
A lot has been said about what it means for a Scrum Master to succeed. Khaja takes a different approach in this episode and shares with us how we can help our teams succeed. He shares 4 steps he has successfully used in this own practice when taking on new teams, or reaching a tough spot with an existing team.
About Khaja Mohiuddin
An accomplished and fluent communicator with strong investigation, problem-solving and decision-making skills. Managing the work from initial request through estimation, approval, requirements, build and implementation.
You can link with Khaja Mohiuddin on LinkedIn.
There are many reasons why teams don’t like or even resist change. One of those reasons is the perceived difficulty or size of the change. It’s ok to take on big challenges, but sometimes they just feel impossible. Khaja shares with us how he approached such a situation where a team felt that Agile itself was a change large enough that it was scary. How do we help teams like that? Listen in.
About Khaja Mohiuddin
An accomplished and fluent communicator with strong investigation, problem-solving and decision-making skills. Managing the work from initial request through estimation, approval, requirements, build and implementation.
You can link with Khaja Mohiuddin on LinkedIn.
We’ve all been there. We are working with a team that is struggling to keep the flow. They are missing deliveries, can’t get enough time to hold a retrospective, and is even too busy to pay attention to the quality of their code. How to help such a team? Khaja shares his recipe for how to help teams that are overwhelmed with work.
About Khaja Mohiuddin
An accomplished and fluent communicator with strong investigation, problem-solving and decision-making skills. Managing the work from initial request through estimation, approval, requirements, build and implementation.
You can link with Khaja Mohiuddin on LinkedIn.
In this episode Khaja shares a story of a team that was only a team in name. Their setup was influenced by a manager that did not get Agile. How to handle such a situation? Khaja shares his recipe for handling such situations, and advises us to be careful as some organizations are just not ready to change.
About Khaja Mohiuddin
An accomplished and fluent communicator with strong investigation, problem-solving and decision-making skills. Managing the work from initial request through estimation, approval, requirements, build and implementation.
You can link with Khaja Mohiuddin on LinkedIn.
Intuition is said to be the symptom of knowledge meeting experience in a sudden burst of creativity (actually I just made that up ;). What is the role of intuition for us as Scrum Masters? Specifically, how can intuition help us understand the system that affects the teams we work with? Listen in for a trip to the 3rd dimension of being a Scrum Master. Oh, and happy Friday! :)
About Peter Götz
Peter is working as a consultant, trainer and coach based in Munich. He started working as a Java software developer in 2001, changed to consulting in 2006 and has been working as software developer, software architect, technical project manager or team lead. He is a Professional Scrum Trainer at scrum.org and supports teams in adopting Scrum since 2008.
You can link with Peter Götz on LinkedIn and connect with Peter Götz on Twitter. And our listeners in Germany can find Peter Götz on Xing.
Peter has a specific perspective on the Scrum Master role that is influenced by his own role as an external consultant that comes in to help a client reach certain goals. In this episode he shares with us what he has learned from that experience as well as the practices he now takes into use when in such an assignment.
About Peter Götz
Peter is working as a consultant, trainer and coach based in Munich. He started working as a Java software developer in 2001, changed to consulting in 2006 and has been working as software developer, software architect, technical project manager or team lead. He is a Professional Scrum Trainer at scrum.org and supports teams in adopting Scrum since 2008.
You can link with Peter Götz on LinkedIn and connect with Peter Götz on Twitter. And our listeners in Germany can find Peter Götz on Xing.